Sigrid Olsen Biography

Fashion designer

Sigrid Olsen

Born in 1953, in Connecticut; daughter of a painter; married first
husband, 1974 (divorced); married Curtis Sanders (a textile company
executive), July, 2000; children: Brita (from first marriage).
Education:
Earned degree from Montserrat College of Art, 1974.

Career

Began career as a weaver; co-founded Ten Hands, Rockport, MA, early 1980s;
began selling housewares and clothing made from self-designed textile
prints, c. 1984; founded apparel line, Segrets Sun Prints, 1986; changed
company name to Sigrid Olsen, 1994; sold stake in company to Liz Claiborne
Inc., 1999; opened first retail store, 2003; launched a home line, 2005.
Trustee, Montserrat College of Art.

Sidelights

To the surprise of many of her devoted customers, American designer Sigrid
Olsen is a real person, not just the ideal name for a women's
clothing label. The Massachusetts native began her career as an artist,
and her exuberant, colorful textile prints launched a business in the
1980s that grew impressively over the years. Since becoming part of the
Liz Claiborne empire in 1999, Olsen's company has moved into the
retail market with freestanding stores, and the designer has taken a more
public role as the face behind the brand. Olsen attributes the phenomenal
success of her line to her personal enthusiasm for her work. "I
have a passion for what I do," she told Marylin Johnson in the
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
. "I hire people I love to work with and keep the work environment
stimulating, inspirational, and fun. Plus, I follow my instincts and
don't think too much!"

Born in 1953, Olsen grew up in a household devoted to art, not commerce.
Her father was a painter, and a grandmother had been involved in the
fashion industry. She was drawn to art herself from a very young age, she
told
Organic Style
, noting that "I was an only child and spent a lot of time by
myself." Summer vacations were spent on Block Island, located off
the coast of Rhode Island, and Martha's Vineyard, a Massachusetts
island and popular New England-area resort. She entered Montserrat College
of Art near Boston, and married her first husband, whose surname was
Olsen, in 1974, the same year she graduated.

Olsen began her career as a weaver, and by 1984 had joined with four other
artists to form a co-op crafts gallery they called Ten Hands in Rockport,
Massachusetts. Around this same time she began printing her own fabrics,
which she did by using
potato halves to produce colorful, abstract, patterns. She began selling
home wares such as quilts and pillows made from her fabrics, and then
ventured into clothing. In the spring of 1986 she launched Segrets Sun
Prints, a line of apparel, which she wholesaled to boutiques across New
England and as far away as California and Florida.

By 1994, Olsen's company had done a line of golf and tennis wear,
but subsisted mainly on sales from sweaters and knits to specialty stores
across the United States. That year, she changed the name on the label to
her own, and continued to produce sportswear and more
workplace-appropriate gear that appealed to her core customer base. A
dress line was added in 1995, and by 1998 sales were estimated at $60
million. In early 1999, Liz Claiborne Inc. announced it was adding the
Sigrid Olsen label to its growing roster of clothing brands, at a price
later revealed to be $54 million. It was a year of impressive acquisitions
for the Claiborne group, including Laundry by Shelli Segal and Lucky Brand
Dungarees, that made it a leader in the U.S. women's apparel
market.

After the deal, Olsen retained a stake in her company just over 15
percent, as well as creative control, but the agreement allowed her brand
to tap into its parent company's massive manufacturing, marketing,
and distribution resources. It added Sigrid Olsen petite and
women's sizes to its divisions, which already included a denim
line, and began opening its first retail stores in 2003. The first was
located in the Chestnut Hill area of Newton, Massachusetts, an affluent
suburb of Boston. "I've been dreaming about retail for a
long time," Olsen told a reporter for
WWD
, Katherine Bowers, on opening day. "And I wanted exactly what we
have here, which is a very faithful representation of the brand."

More stores followed later that year, and Olsen returned full circle to
her original line of products with a home furnishings launch in early
2005. Her company also wooed a renowned industry executive, Ellis Kreuger
from Tocca, to serve as design director when Olsen's executive and
retail-appearance obligations began to take up most of her work schedule.
The company hoped to hit a goal of 100 stores by 2007, but began to move
toward a more distinctive style after Olsen and Claiborne hired Pompeii
A.D., a New York City retail design firm responsible for the
French-country-charm look of Anthropologie stores. The newer Sigrid Olsen
stores had a homier look, with couches and art, as well as photographs of
Olsen on vacation and in her home. There were even limited edition prints
of hers available for sale. As the designer explained in a July of 2005
interview with Joan Verdon for the Bergen County
Record
, it was part of a plan to set her stores apart from the competition,
which included Chico's, Ann Taylor, and J. Jill. "Right now
we're known for my clothing, my apparel, just like Ann Taylor
is," she told Verdon. "But there is no Ann Taylor and there
is a Sigrid Olsen. And Ann Taylor's not an artist, and Ann Taylor
didn't start the company herself."

With plans for eyewear, a swimsuit line, and even footwear, Olsen believed
she knew how to deliver appealing goods to her target customer, the baby
boomer. She said she felt a kinship with her customers, and had little
trouble coming up with fresh takes on her signature look. "My whole
lifestyle and attitude is very active, very modern," she told
Verdon in the
Record
. "But I think that is more and more the norm for people in my
generation. Today's 50-year-old isn't your mother's
50-year-old."

Olsen's daughter, Brita, is an executive at the company, which
still keeps an office in Wakefield, Massachusetts. Olsen lives near there,
in the town of Hamilton, but has an apartment in New York City close to
her Seventh Avenue showroom. "I need distance from the craziness of
New York to work in the art studio in my house," she explained to
WWD
's Rosemary Feitelberg. "That's really the nucleus of
the creative part of me." Coming from a family so devoted to
artistic pursuits, she admitted that even as her business thrived,
relatives "were all skeptical," she told
Organic Style
. "My dad asked, 'When are you going to get back to your
art?'"